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The Rural Voice, 1998-10, Page 14SERVICE CENTRE INC. 479 MacEwan St., Goderich N7A 4M1 MAKING CANADA BETTER GIVE CANADA STEEL A CALL FOR ALL YOUR STEEL NEEDS Please call: TOLL FREE 1-888-871-7330 PHONE (519) 524-8484 FAX (519) 524-2749 CANADIAN CO-OPERATIVE WOOL GROWERS LIMITED Now Available WOOL ADVANCE PAYMENTS 300 per pound * Skirted Fleeces * Well -Packed Sacks For more information contact: WINGHAM WOOL DEPOT John Farrell R.R. 2, Wingham, Ontario Phone/Fax 519-357-1058 10 THE RURAL VOICE The World from Mabel's Grill "Did you hear the one about Bill Clinton and ..." That's as far as Dave Winston got before Mabel came storming out of the kitchen. "That's enough of that!," she warned, waving the big knife she'd been using to chop vegetables. "Bill Clinton jokes have been added to my list of forbidden subjects." "Sheesh, there are soon going to be so many forbidden topics it won't be worth coming in The world's problems are solved daily 'round the table at Mabel's here," Wayne Bruce said. "You're supposed to be coming for the food," Molly Whiteside said. "Yeh right," said Dave. "Bill's only a guy," said George McKenzie. "I'd have figured you women wouldn't have minded poor old Bill getting ridiculed. Now if Dave had been telling a Monica Lewinsky joke I could see you being so sensitive." "Yeh," said Dave. "How come she gets off so easy in all this?" "Typical!" thundered George. "Women always get treated differ- ently. Take this whole pay equity thing in Ottawa. Somebody comes along and decides a file clerk has as important a job as a fireman so she has to get a raise. Anybody ask her if she got burned by any hot files lately?" "It's just equal pay for work of equal value," Molly said. "I'd like some of that," Dave said. "I'd like some commission to look at the work I do providing the food people need to live, then tell me I should earn as much as a doctor because he couldn't keep people healthy if it wasn't for my food." "Won't happen," George said. "Not until farmers are all women." "Heck, I wouldn't mind if I could make as much as the girl who sells my food at the supermarket," said Cliff Murray. "With prices the way they are this year, anyway." "It's a funny thing," Dave said, "that farmers have the one product that you can't exist without, and somehow we end up having to take whatever price people will give us. Then you take something like Coca- Cola that people don't need at all, but they managed to convince half the world's population that their life won't be worth living if they don't have a Coke every day." "I guess we're just not very good at marketing," George said. "Those guys at the cola companies and the fast food companies, they know how to get the most from what thcy have, even if it isn't much." "The problem is we've got no clout," said Cliff. "Now look the way the seed companies got us in a corner even for a product we used to have for free for as long as people farmed. This new terminator gene will make sure we have to buy new seed from them every year." "How do we get a terminator gene for pork?" Dave wondered. "You got it," Wayne said. "They only eat it once and then it's terminated in the toilet. It's not like my shoes that some people can make last for years." "We used to have a terminator when I was a kid," George said. "In in the days before we had refriger- ators if you didn't eat meat up quick it went spoiled and you had to buy more." "Yeh, we're going in the opposite direction to everybody else," said Hank Vanderplast. "Everybody else is into planned obsolescence. I mean by the time I figure out how to install a new program in my computer they're sending me a notice saying they've updated it. Meanwhile the marketing board has made me have my milk so pure it wouldn't go sour if I left it on the kitchen counter for a week in August." "But the consumer is really worried about food safety," George said. "You've got to give the consumer what they want." "Unless you're a seed company and your consumer is a farmer," said Cliff.0